SBUH Hand Surgeons Reattach Severed Hands After Accident

4:18 May 29, 2013

Left to right, members of the Stony Brook University Hospital surgical team that reattached the hands of Kenneth Klapak, center, are: Mark Braunstein, MD, hand fellow, who assisted in the surgery; Mark Epstein, MD, plastic surgeon, who completed the reattachment of the right hand; Jason Ganz, MD, hand surgeon, who reattached the left hand and performed the initial surgery on the right hand; and Lauren Grossman, MD, hand fellow, who assisted in the surgery.

STONY BROOK, NY – A team of hand surgeons at Stony Brook University Hospital (SBUH) successfully reattached the hands of a 53-year-old sheet metal worker from Staten Island, NY, after an accident on May 16 nearly severed them.

Jason Ganz, MD, a plastic surgeon who specializes in microsurgical limb reattachment at SBUH, performed the eight-hour surgery on Kenneth Klapak with Mark Epstein, MD, a plastic surgeon in Stony Brook, NY, assisted by Lauren Grossman, MD, and Mark Braunstein, MD, hand fellows at SBUH. Doctors say Klapak is expected to regain limited use of both hands.

Volunteers from North Babylon Fire Department responded to the scene of the accident in North Babylon, NY, and Klapak was airlifted via helicopter by Suffolk County Emergency Management Services paramedics to SBUH, which is Suffolk County’s only Level 1 Trauma Center.

Dr. Ganz performed the reattachment of the left hand, which was severed in a tranverse angle across the top of the hand from the thumb to the wrist, and initiated reattachment of the right hand, which was severed laterally across the wrist. He was then joined by Dr. Epstein, who completed the reattachment of the right hand while Dr. Ganz completed the left hand. All arteries and veins in both hands were severed except a single nerve in his right hand, as both hands dangled by tendons in the palms of his hands.

Working within a critical window of six hours or less to re-establish blood flow, the surgical team worked feverishly and meticulously to reconnect the veins, arteries and nerves. After the connections were complete, the skin tone in his hands changed to a pink color, indicating restored blood flow.

“Mr. Klapak is very lucky that he was brought to the right place immediately,” Dr. Ganz said. “He was transported from the Emergency Room to the Operating Room in less time than it took me to change into my scrubs.”

Surgeons used a cadaver nerve to replace a missing nerve that was completely crushed in Klapak’s left hand, Dr. Ganz said, and transplanted a tendon from his right forearm to his left hand as well. Klapak is receiving additional skin grafts to further repair the damage. He will be receiving occupational and physical therapy to maximize his functional outcome.

“Some of the patient’s flexor tendons were uninjured,” Dr. Ganz said, “which ultimately bodes very well for his hand function. Although he will have limited use of both hands, through physical therapy that may last a year or more, and the prospect of additional operations, his prognosis is good.”

“This was obviously a team effort,” Dr. Ganz continued. ”Every nurse, every resident, and every anesthesiologist who took care of him that day made Stony Brook proud.”

Klapak said that when he awoke on May 17 in his hospital room, he saw his hands and wiggled his fingers. “I thought, I hit the lotto,” he said, with a tear in his eye, his voice breaking with emotion, as his wife, Kimberly, comforted him. “I was like, ‘Thank you God.’ I am such a lucky man.”

A guitar player for 45 years who is righthanded, Klapak said he is determined to play the instrument he loves again in the future. He is also looking forward to returning home with his wife, who has been with him around the clock. He praised the hospital staff and the expert care he has received at Stony Brook.

“I wouldn’t trade it for the world,” he said. “It’s incredible. I have nothing but praise for the hospital.”

Stony Brook surgeons also performed a double hand reattachment surgery in 2005 on patient Arsenio Matias, at the time a 49-year-old plastic factory supervisor. That procedure was performed by a team led by Alexander Dagum, MD, Interim Chair of the Department of Surgery at Stony Brook University School of Medicine and Chief of the Department of Plastic Surgery at SBUH, and Lawrence Hurst, MD, Professor and Chairman, Department of Orthopaedics, Stony Brook University School of Medicine.

As the only Level 1 Trauma Center in Suffolk County, SBUH treats more than 90,000 Emergency Department patients annually, including approximately 2,000 trauma patients. SBUH receives transfers of complex, critically injured patients from community hospitals across Suffolk County. Stony Brook also provides online medical control for all volunteer ambulance agencies in the county.

Stony Brook EMS paramedics staff Suffolk Police helicopters under the medical control and direction of SBUH, completing approximately 450 flights each year. Stony Brook’s Trauma Center is one of four centers in New York State with inpatient survival rates for trauma patients that are significantly above the state average, according to the latest report from the New York State Trauma System.

Paramedical

Medical News

HealthCanal.com is a premier online Health News write / Medical Research News write service provider with our primary focus is to cover the latest happenings from the dynamic world of Health and Medicine to help you keep.